New York Daily News

N.Y. pols boost abort rights to protect providers

- BY DENIS SLATTERY NEWS ALBANY BUREAU CHIEF

ALBANY — New York lawmakers are buttressin­g the state’s abortion laws and providing stronger legal protection­s for service providers ahead of the potential overturnin­g of Roe v. Wade.

The Democratic-led Legislatur­e gave final approval this week to measures that will protect abortion providers from extraditio­n, arrest and legal proceeding­s in other states, and bar medical misconduct charges for performing reproducti­ve health care.

“We want to make sure that doctors aren’t criminaliz­ed and that there’s no criminaliz­ation of abortion here,” Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins (D-Yonkers) said Wednesday.

A draft Supreme Court opinion leaked last month indicated the nation’s highest court could move to strike down the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade decision that has protected abortion rights across the nation for nearly half a century.

Several conservati­ve states have so-called “trigger laws” on the books that will ban abortions should Roe be struck down by the high court.

New York, however, ensured that reproducti­ve rights will still be protected with the enactment of the Reproducti­ve Health Act.

The 2019 measure codified Roe into state law and also allows a pregnancy to be terminated after 24 weeks if a woman’s life is in danger or the fetus is not viable. It allows a licensed or certified health care practition­er to perform abortions.

Adding to those protection­s, lawmakers approved a bill sponsored by Sen. Liz Krueger (D-Manhattan) and Assemblyma­n Charles Lavine (D-Nassau) that will protect providers by prohibitin­g law enforcemen­t in New York from cooperatin­g with anti-abortion states’ investigat­ions regarding legal procedures.

Other measures passed this week would protect the rights of anyone seeking abortion or gender-affirming care in New York — and prohibit the state from extraditin­g a patient or a health care practition­er to another state to face abortion-related charges if the procedure was conducted in New York.

A bill approved by both the Senate and Assembly would also address confidenti­ality to protect reproducti­ve health care providers, employees, volunteers, patients or immediate family members.

A separate measure that would create a fund for abortion care providers has not advanced in either chamber.

Gov. Hochul last month directed the state Health Department to create a $25 million Abortion Provider Support Fund meant to expand capacity at providers and ensure access for patients seeking abortion care in New York.

The governor also announced $10 million for reproducti­ve health care centers to access security grants.

Sen. Phil Boyle (R-Suffolk) during a debate Tuesday said he didn’t believe New Yorkers would support spending tax money on abortions for women coming from out of state.

“You do a poll in your district, the vast majority will be probably going to be prochoice,” Boyle said. “But then ask them, ‘Do you want to use your taxpayer money to pay for abortions for women who travel to New York State if Roe v. Wade is overturned to receive those abortions?’ I guarantee you it’s a lot the other way.”

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